The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 11, 1987, Image 10

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Page 10/The Battalion/Friday, December 11, 1987
Battalion
Classifieds
• FOR RENT
Duplexes For Lease
Southwest Pkwy. (Lawyer St. & Trinity PI.)
2 Bdrm, 1 Va Bath, Garage, Fen. bk. yd., Stove,
Refrig., Dishwasher, Cen. heat & air.
Deposit $200., Rent $350./mo.
Phone after 7pm. Mon-Sat
All day Sun.
693-5177 ask for Bill
• HELP WANTED
Alt Wrapped Up & Ready
To Move-In!
At Stone wood Village we have studio loft apts ]
with your choice of 1 of2 bdrms and 1 or 2 baths.
We have a pool, courtyards, 24 hr. maint., on- I
site security ragmt. & we're on the shuttle route! [
693-0077
1903 Dartmouth
PrqftsfionaUy mamagml by AAM Property *4grm.
Looking for a quiet place to live?
Townshire Manor
Apts.
401 Lake-Bryan
822-7178 or 268-8620
Professionally managed by
On-Line Property Managers.
THE GOLDEN RULE
Fall or Spring Openings for
Men and Women
Christian-like, non-smoking
Telephones in Deluxe Apts.
UTILITIES AND CABLE PAID
Free Laundry, Storage, Bus
CALL/ASK: 693-5560 After 4pm
$150./mo. Share B/B, $250./mo.
Own B/B 3ts/4
Cotton Village Apts.,
Snook, Tx.
1 Bdrm,; $200 2 Bdrm.; $248
Rental assistance available!
Call 846-8878 or 774-0773
after 5pm. 4rt
* PERSONALS
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY
BEAR
LOVE,
GARY ZAY
Looking For Guy Who Returned Lost ECON203 Note
book With Turtle. 764-9738. 68tl2/l 1
♦ LOST AND FOUND
Lost 8mm pearl earring between Health Center &
U.P.D. Sentimental Value. REWARD! 696-1960, 845-
5221. 69tl2/l 1
9 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
ALL CASH INCOME: Annual census shows average
monthly income of $1,426.88 from cash investment of
$16,500. No selling required. Service company owned
accounts handling 100% pure natural fruit juice. You
must be willing to work 9 hours per week and have
money to invest. Areas are limited. Call toll-free 1-800-
782-1550. Operator 4-J. Anytime. 72H2/11
Entreprenural Horticulture
Student
We need a research document
relating to the Horticultural/Agri
cultural market with a chemical
twist. A minimum requirement is a
graduate degree. Please submit
resume to:
John Shannon
J.R.M.
110W. Streetsboro
Hudson, Ohio 44236
7111/18
OPPORTUNITY
for
MARRIED STUDENT
Manage & maintain mobile
home park & rent houses
Housing & Salary negotiable
For info, call 693-2339
CRUISE SHIPS
NOW HIRING. M/F
Summer & Carer Opportunities (Will Train).
Excellent pay plus world travel. Hawaii, Ba
hamas, Caribbean, etc. CALL NOW:
206-736-0775 Ext. 466H 19tfn
Sublease TREEHOUSE VILLAGE Apt. Skip the wait
ing list. $270., free phone/cable hookup. 696-4392.
72tl/13
3 Bdrm condominium in Breckenridge Colorado Jan
uary 8-15, sleeps 8, $800.; 2 Bdrm condominium at the
Tennis Club in Palm Springs, California, sleeps 6,
$1100. Call (915) 581-2500 Ira Batt. 72tl2/l 1
One bedroom, quiet, wooded, convenient area. Half
month free. 846-6473 evenings.
65tl2/4
Treehouse Village furnished 1-1. Sublease $465./mo.
Call 845-7773 or 693-5102. 69tl2/ll
2 Bdrm, 1 Bath large windows & tall trees. $410./mo.
Normandy Square Apts, in Northgate. 764-7314. 69tfn
3-2 Duplex for rent. 693-4335. Carport, washer/dryer
connection. Call anytime. 69t 12/11
Sublease Efficiency Apartment. All bills paid except
electricity. Call 764-1633. 69tl2/l 1
3 Bdrm, 2 Bath house for rent. Newly remodeled, very
close to TAMU. Large fenced yard, lots of parking,
quiet neighborhood, near park. Prefer faculty or grad
uate student, but will consider undergraduate. $535.
Bruce 822-7122, 7pm to 11pm. 7H1/18
Pre-leasing 3 BR/2 BA Duplex near Hilton. 846-
2471/776-6856 63t/indef.
Rooms for Rent. Call Mrs. Thomas 696-1072.63t/12/l 1
1 & 2 bdrm. apt. A/C & Heat. Wall to Wall carpet. 512
& 515 Northgate / First St. 409-825-2761. No Pets.
140tfn
2-1 VS apt. @ Peppertree $375./mo. Unfurnished. Free
cable. Call Patti 696-5408. 69t 12/11
Luxury 4-plex Apartments. Available for Dec. or Jan.
move in. Call WYNDHAM 846-4384. $350./mo.
68tl2/l 1
Walk to A&M (Northgate). 2 Br/1 Bath, $250-285./mo.
Call 776-2300, wkends 1-279-2967. 67tl/21
• NOTICE
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40
WANTED: Individuals with fre
quent aches & pains (arthritis,
burcitis, joint pain, headaches,
long term sports injuries) who reg
ularly take over-the-counter pain
medication to participate in an at
home study. $40 incentive for
those chosen to participate.
Please call:
Pauli Research International
776-6236
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40 $40
HEADACHES
We would like to treat your
tension headache with Tyle
nol or Advil and pay you $40.
CALL PAULL RESEARCH
INTERNATIONAL
776-6236
$40 $40 $40 $40 $40 po
• row SALE
•Deer, Bass, Ducks, Squirrels
•68 acres in Burleson County,
$975/acre
W'* eTwo ponds. Perfect
retreat.
L/WH& •Call John Clark
2 68 -7829
B-CS Realty
Across from Hilton 51111/11
♦ FOR SALE
FRATERNITIES
FOR SALE 2 FOURPLEXES
Large yard, extremely close to
TAMU.
Call 846-1253 ask for Jim
• TRAVEL
• GARAGE SALE
♦ SERVICES
COUSNELORS - Boys camp in Berkshire Mts., West.
Mass. Good sal., room & bd., travel allowance, beauti
ful modern facility, must love children & be able to
teach one of the following: Tennis, W.S.I., Sailing, Wa-
terski, Baseball, Basketball, Soccer, LaCrosse, Wood,
A&C, Rocketry, Photography, Archery,_ Pioneering,
Ropes, Piano, Drama. Call or write: Camp Winadu, 5
Glen La., Mamaroneck, NY 10543. (9J.4) 381-5983.
64tl2/2
Part time help morning only Grapevine Rest. Call for
appt. ask for Patsy 696-3411. 72tl/13
WANTED: BASKETBALL OFFICIALS. Anyone in
terested in officiating Intramural Basketball should at
tend an orientation meeting on Mon. Jan. 18, 1988 at
6pm in 164 Read. For more information, contact Mike
at 845-7826. 66U2/4
COUNSELORS - Girls camp in Maine. Good sal., room
& bd., travel allowance, beautiful modern facility, must
love children & be able to teach one of the following:
Tennis, W.S.L, Sailing, Waterski, Softball, Basketball,
Soccer, LaCrosse, A&C, Photography, Horseback,
Dance, Piano, Drama, Ropes, Camp Craft, Gymnastics.
Call or write: Camp Vega, Box 1771, Duxbury, Mass.
02332.(617)934-6536. 64tl2/2
Babysitters Needed Jan. 4 1:00 p.m.-5:30 p.m. Week
days. Infant and two children after school.nonsmoker-
,reliable transportation 690-0146. Leave message.67tl2/ll
Graduate students needed for notetaking for spring se
mester. Must type & be dependable. Excellent oppor
tunity for T.A.’s. Please call 846-2255 or come by 112
Nagle for interview. 67tl2/l 1
Now hiring cashiers part-time mornings & afternoons.
Farm Patch Produce Market. Call and ask for Lisa.
779-7209. 66tl2/ll
♦ WANTED ^
Cotton Tickets Wanted 4 together or 2-2 will add extra
$30. for your time & effort & reimburse phone call.
(713) 645-0923 Art or Pam. 70tl2/l 1
Stanford University Professor and wife. Happily mar
ried for many years. Anxious to adopt newborn infant.
Personal meeting welcome. Lawful and proper preg
nancy related expenses paid. Couple approved by Cali
fornia adoption authorities in advance of placement.
State supervised adoption procedures. Please call col
lect Terri and Michael Payer (415) 328-8723. 68tl2/l 1
♦ ROOMMATE WANTED
Large 2 Bdrm, 2 Bath. Near shuttle. Female preferred.
$207.50 plus electric 696-3621. 72tl2/l 1
Need roommate for spring. Treehouse Village $210.
plus utilities. Great location! 696-3488. 72tl2/l 1
Male/Female roommate needed. 2 Bedroom/2 Bath
house $800/semester or $200/month. Spring semester
Call: 846-6363. 7U1/18
Room in house near campus, male, non-smoker $170.
no bills. 696-3884. 71112/11
Need males to share a 3 bdrm, 2 Bath house in C.S.
ShutUe bus, w/d & more. Call J.R. 775-0400. 7U12/11
Male 4-2 house, Bryan $132.50./mo. + Vt utilities. 823-
0384 ask for Darrin. 70U2/11
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 1-1 apart-
ment for spring. January rent paid. 696-3861 Missy.
70tl2/l 1
Roommate Wanted. 2 bedroom, IVit bath. $165./mo.
Phone 696-1312 after 1pm. 66tl2/ll
Searching for a new roomate 3-2 House $125. a month
823-0340 after 5p.m. 63t/12/U
Battalion
Advertising —
let it work for
your business.
Call
845-2611
Today.
World and Nation
Soviet media forecast
Senate OK on accord
Honda Aero 80 scooters, 1 red, 1 silver. Call Janet at
846-3524. 72tl2/ll
Moped: 1985 Aero 80, good condition. $500 Call John
@846-1260. 72t 12/11
COMPUTER’S ETC. 693-7599. LOWEST PRICES
EVER! EBM-PC/XT COMPATIBLES: 640KB-RAM,
2-360KB DRIVES, TURBO. KEYBOARD, MON
ITOR: $599. PC/AT SYSTEMS: $899. Itfn
'87 Toyota SR-5 4x4, mud tires, long bed. $2500. nego
tiable. 693-6753. 7U12/11
LAST CALL FOR SKIERS: Additional space added on
Sunchase ToursvSixth Annual Collegiate Winter Ski
Breaks to Steamboat, Vail, Breckenridge or Winter
Park from only $154 including five or seven nights
lodging, lifts, picnics, parties and races. Over 4,000
participating so far! Call toll free for full color bro
chure and reservations 1-800-321-5911 TODAY!
68U/20
Spring Break '88 trips available now! Your choice:
South Padre Island; North Padre/Mustang Island; Gal
veston Island, Texas. Daytona Beach; Fort Walton
Beach; Miami Beach; Orlando/Disney World, Florida.
Hilton Head, South Carolina or sking at Steamboat,
Colorado. All the most wanted destinations at discount
prices. Call toll free for complete Sunchase Tours Sev
enth Annual Spring Break Bash color brochure and
reservations today. 1 -800-321 -5911 6St 12/11
MOSCOW (AP) — Soviet media
painted a hopeful picture of super-
power relations as the Washington
summit drew to a close Thursday.
Major dailies such as Pravda and
Izvestia boldly predicted the disar
mament accord signed at the summit
$•• related story, Page 1
would be ratified by the U.S. Senate
in view of what it said was wide
spread public support.
Once ratified, the agreement
signed Tuesday by President Reagan
and Soviet Communist Party Gen
eral Secretary Mikhail S. Gorbachev
will rid both nations of medium- and
shorter-range nuclear missiles.
“Judging from the first outcries,
the majority of senators positively as
sess the document,” Pravda said, ref
erring to the treaty.
Gorbachev and Reagan were able
to focus their attention on prospects
for a strategic arms accord that
would cut both nations’ stockpiles of
long-range missiles by 50 percent,
“In Soviet textbooks the
United States is discussed
as if they were still hang
ing blacks there. ”
— Moscow News
correspondent
Yegor Yakovlev
Pravda noted as a sign of encourage
ment.
“According to various forecasts,
about 10 to 25 senators will risk
openly coming out against the
agreement, which enjoys the sup-
port of four out of five Americans,”
Izvestia said without giving the
source of its public opinion reading.
The weekly Moscow News, which
has been at the forefront of Gorba
chev’s campaign for “glasnost,” or
greater openness in discussing the
problems faced by Soviet society, ac
knowledged that people in botn na
tions — not just the United States —
harbor outdated stereotypes of the
other.
Moscow News correspondent Ye
gor Yakovlev wrote from Washing
ton that U.S. and Soviet specialists
compared textbooks a month ago.
They discovered, he said, that
“American children have the Soviet
Union described to them as if it were
still under Stalin’s reign . . . and in
Soviet textbooks the United States is
discussed as if they were still hang
ing blacks there.”
The Washington Post carried a
similar story Sunday.
Soviet television continued to fo
cus on the pomp and ceremony of
the Washington visit, broadcasting
scenes from the dinner honoring
Reagan held at the Soviet Embassy
on Wednesday night.
Gorbachev’s exchanges with U.S.
businessmen and with congressional
leaders also were broadcast Thurs
day.
Former aide accused
of perjuring testimony
Multi Family Garage Sale. Sunday noon-4pm. Married
Student Apts, across from Skaggs. Houselhold items,
food. 71tl2/n
TYPING, EDITING, WRITING. Articles, papers,
newsletters. Words Worth. 690-1553. 69t 1/21
DEFENSIVE DRIVING TICKET DISMISSAL, IN
SURANCE DISCOUNT. CLASSES EVERY WEEK!!
693-1322. 24U2/16
VriflSATILE WORD PROCESSING - BEST PRICES.
.'FREE CORRECTIONS. RESUMES, THESES, PA
PERS, GRAPHICS, EQUATIONS, ETC. LASER
QUALITY. 696-2052. 163tfn
TYPING AND WORD PROCESSING. FAST, REA
SONABLE, QUICK TURNAROUND AVAILABLE.
693-1598. 51tl2/ll
WASHINGTON (AP) — Lobbyist
Michael K. Deaver gave false testi
mony to bury allegations he improp
erly traded on his White House in
fluence, the prosecutor in the
former presidential aide’s perjury
trial toldjurors Thursday.
Deaver “started on a plan of delib
erate cover-up and perjury was a
part of it” to counter allegations he
used his long association with Presi
dent Reagan to get six-figure lobby
ing contracts, independent counsel
Whitney North Seymour Jr. toldju
rors in closing arguments at Deaver’s
trial.
News stories that questioned
Deaver’s lobbying activities helped
scuttle the planned sale of Deaver’s
firm to a London public relations
company for up to $16 million, Sey
mour said.
“How was he to keep his existing
clients if the bad publicity contin
ued?” Seymour argued.
“This man, who had been hailed
as the great image-maker, was going
to create an image for himself,” Sey
mour said, referring to Deaver’s for
mer role as Reagan’s top public rela
tions aide.
He said Deaver was going to show
the clients and the public that “he
had nothing to hide.”
The “first part of the plan of mis
information” was Deaver’s call for an
independent counsel to investigate
the allegations of ethical impropri
ety, Seymour said.
But “Mr. Deaver didn’t want a
thorough examination, he wanted
an independent counsel for an ob
vious reason — it meant the matter
could be buried” inside a closed
grand jury room, Seymour said.
“With any luck, the thing could be
forgotten” if Deaver “could control
the results of the grand jury investi
gation,” Seymour said. “And that’s
what led to the perjury.”
The former deputy White House
chief of staff is charged with five
counts of lying to a House subcom
mittee and the grand jury about his
lobbying contacts with former ad
ministration colleagues.
Each charge carries a maximum
five-year prison term and a $6,800
fine.
Jurors are expected to begin de
liberations Friday following legal in
structions from U.S. District Judge
Thomas Penfield Jackson.
Seymour said Deaver launched
the second phase of his misinforma
tion campaign on May 16, 1986
when he testified under oath before
the House Energy and Commerce
investigations subcommittee.
Deaver said he did nothing to
help a South Korean trade envoy,
Kim Kihwan, get a brief appoint
ment to deliver a letter to Reagan
from South Korea’s president.
“It really boggles the mind to
think he could forget he had done
that,” Seymour said of Deaver’s con
gressional testimony. “That testi
mony is plainly false.
“The door was shut, his false an
swers on that occasion blocked the
inquiry on the use of influence on
behalf of a client.”
FBI uncovers
death notice
in plane crash
Cayucos, Calif. (AP) — A fired
airline worker furious over his
dismissal boarded a jet carrying a
gun — and possibly explosives —
to kill his supervisor and wrote
him a death message on an air
sickness bag, the FBI and court
documents disclosed Thursday.
“Hi Ray, I think its sort of iron
ical that we end up like this,” the
unsigned message read, which
authorities say was written by Da
vid Burke to Raymond Thomson.
“I ask for some leniency for my
family, remember. Well, I got
none and you’ll get none.”
Investigators found the chil
ling message written on an air
sickness bag at the site where Pa
cific Southwest Airlines Flight
1771 crashed on Monday, Los
Angeles FBI Special Agent Rich
ard Bretzing said.
A .44-caliber Magnum pistol
found Wednesday at the crash
site was linked on Thursday to
Burke.
Officials also said additional
evidence indicates an explosion as
well as gunfire may nave de
stroyed the plane bound from
Los Angeles to San Francisco. All
43 people aboard were killed.
A multipart affidavit filed in
Los Angeles Federal Court con
cluded that there is evidence to
believe David Burke was involved
in the destruction of PSA Flight
1771.
Etiquette pro colls summit 'disaster'
KEWANEE, Ill. (AP) — Plastic
wrapping on roses, a blue suit at a
black-tie dinner, unanswered invita
tions and other faux pas turned the
superpower summit into an “eti
quette disaster,” according to man
ners maven Matjabelle Young Stew
art.
For example, Raisa Gorbachev
should have responded promptly to
Nancy Reagan’s invitation to meet
over coffee, Stewart said.
Even more gauche was Soviet
leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev’s deci
sion to wear a blue suit to a formal
state dinner during the three-day
summit in Washington, Stewart, au
thor of 15 books on etiquette, said.
Mrs. Stewart doesn’t know who to
chastise for the bouquets presented
to the Gorbachevs upon their arrival
in the United States.
“They handed Mrs. Gorbachev a
skimpy bouquet of roses wrapped in
plastic,” she said. “They should have
presented her an armful of flowers.
“And they gave the general secre
tary a funny hide bouquet and then
didn’t take it from him so he could
shake hands.”
Otherwise, Mrs. Stewart gave high
marks to the nation’s display of hos
pitality.
CONGRATULATIONS
GRADUATES!
HAVE FUN CELEBRATING —
BUT BE CAREFUL ON THE ROAD.
Alcohol Awareness Program
Department of Student Affairs
845-5826